Array Labs Secures $20 Million to Build Affordable Radar Satellites

Array Labs, a space technology firm located in Silicon Valley, managed to garner $20 million through a Series A financing that was directed towards the enhancement of its radar satellite systems. The financing round was spearheaded by Catapult Ventures and alongside, participated by Washington Harbour Partners, Kompas VC, Y Combinator, Maiora Capital, Aera VC, Animal Capital, Cultivation Capital, and Clearance Ventures.
This recent funding boosts Array’s total fundraising to approximately $35 million since its inception, which includes a seed round of $5 million in 2022 and a further $10 million raise in 2024, to be precise.
To enhance production and speed up its product development, the company has planned the new funds for such purposes. It has claimed that the Radar architecture developed by it is the first and is aimed at mass production, utilizing techniques based on consumer electronics and telecommunication.
This method is a stark contrast to that of the radar systems, which are costly and made-to-order one unit at a time. Array’s strategy is to drive down hardware costs while simultaneously enhancing performance, thus, breaking the ground for commercial applications of previously unused radar satellite data.
Year 2025 witnessed the company experience rapid growth. Array not only doubled its workforce, but also finished the satellite bus design, brought in two additional product lines, and ramped its revenues from the commercial sector to the nine-figure level. The company’s top brass likens the radar satellite niche to the launch industry pre-SpaceX; still dominated by the outdated, costly systems. By implementing Silicon Valley-like engineering and manufacturing practices, Array aims to disrupt the market.
Radar satellites deliver top-notch data on all weather and light conditions of the Earth’s surface which makes them indispensable for various applications like agriculture, forest, and disaster management, as well as infrastructures monitoring. The modular, scalable systems approach of Array is likely to open up the market to customers who require constant and thorough imaging at a lower cost.
The product strategy of the company is establishing a group of satellites, which would be able to work in collaboration, increasing the area covered and the quality of the data. This technique would eventually lead to the global 3D mapping and monitoring services. The website of Array mentions the company’s ongoing partnerships and contracts with defense and space agencies, which in turn adds credibility to its technical roadmap.
Array’s management states that the new funds will be directed to the completion of production capabilities and the initial rollout of commercial. The startup is planning to use its inexpensive radar technology to take on established satellite manufacturers and to widen the radar data market to non-governmental and non-military users. The investors are eager to see whether Array’s plan of gaining market share through cost-effective methods will be the decisive factor in the transformation of the space-based radar imaging industry in the near future or not.
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